David McCloskey knows spy fiction. Having been a CIA analyst in a former life, he knows what makes a spy novel realistic and as a novelist he knows what makes the drama work. His 2021 novel, Damascus Station, is one of my favorite books of recent vintage precisely because it blends the two so beautifully. So on this episode of Bibliography, McCloskey joined the show to discuss some of his favorite books in the genre—new and old—as well as several other books that have defined his reading life over the years. Careful: You’re TBR list is about to get longer.
Thanks for listening!
Graham Greene the Spy, with Christopher Hull
On the Work of the Regional Novelist, with David Joy
Callie Feyen on Teaching Shakespeare
The Summer Reading Episode
Paul Sahre, One of the World's Foremost Book Cover Designers
Discussing the 2019 Pulitzer Prize Finalists with John Wilson
Christian Kiefer on "Phantoms" and the Writing Life
Dostoevsky's Gambling Problem (featuring Dr. Jessica Hooten Wilson)
Eighth Day Book's owner, Warren Farha
The Tragic Story of A Confederacy of Dunces
On Sans Forgetica, a new font to aid memory retention
On the Best Film Adaptations of Books, with Jeffrey Overstreet and Steven Greydanus
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Matthew Zapruder, author of WHY POETRY, on life as a poet
Remembering Mary Oliver (with A.M. Juster and Allison Backous Troy)
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S.D. Smith, Jonathan Rogers, & Douglas McKelvey talk process and vocation
Why "To Kill a Mockingbird" is America's most popular novel
The Year in Movies, with Jeffrey Overstreet
John Wilson on his favorite books of 2018
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